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nsm

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Syntaqlite 0.6: SQLite dot commands and pyodide

lalitm.com
2 points·by nsm·23 giorni fa·0 comments

Ruckus: Racket for iOS

ruckus.defn.io
159 points·by nsm·3 mesi fa·19 comments

The Dark Matter of Hardware Engineering

darkmatter.blog
2 points·by nsm·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Syntaqlite: High-fidelity devtools that SQLite deserves

lalitm.com
7 points·by nsm·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Why use F# for scripting and automation?

iev.ee
5 points·by nsm·4 mesi fa·2 comments

It's All About the Pixel Economy

cvalenzuelab.com
2 points·by nsm·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Canada

jenn.site
145 points·by nsm·6 mesi fa·124 comments

Why Canada Lost Its Measles Elimination Status

jenn.site
4 points·by nsm·6 mesi fa·0 comments

In which our protagonist dreams of laurels

wingolog.org
4 points·by nsm·7 mesi fa·0 comments

A3: Avoid Memos with an Agenda

entropicthoughts.com
3 points·by nsm·7 mesi fa·0 comments

CLion 2025.3 Is Here: Faster Language Engine, Constexpr Debugger, Dap Support

blog.jetbrains.com
2 points·by nsm·7 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

nsm
·2 mesi fa·discuss
If you are on macOS, there is https://nova.app/
nsm
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Not the OP, but for me ST can't be beat in terms of how easy it is to write a plugin. It uses Python (Zed is Rust). Plugins generally auto-reloads. If extensibility is important to you, ST is still the way to go.
nsm
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Two counterpoints:

1. Implying that there are only "a few islands left" shoes a strong bias towards assuming that only thins humans do in the digital realm is relevant, when in fact, the vast majority of things humans do are not in the digital sphere at all.

2. It's pretty clear when most people say that machine intelligence is close, right now, they are alluding to LLM or Deep Learning based approaches. I don't think you should assume they mean machines will catch up in a 100 years. They seem to imply it will be by 2030 or sowmthing.
nsm
·4 mesi fa·discuss
https://without.boats/blog/revisiting-a-smaller-rust/

I think there is a programming language hole for a Rust-like language, but with GC and green threads. One that dispenses with single-ownership, and async/await footguns.

Something like F#/Kotlin is closest in terms of developer experience.

Unfortunately, we are really lacking a language that skews badly on some other axis

- F# - tainted by being Windows only for really long and being Microsoft. - Kotlin - tainted by the JVM - Java 24+ - has virtual threads, sum types, match expressions and other niceties, but tainted by the JVM again (Verbosity included, but this is not really a factor with IDEs and LLMs.)

Note that the opinions above are not mine, but "consensus". I'd say they are all unfair opinions.

I feel like people end up favoring new languages, simply because of novelty. Like, inevitably, somebody is gonna say Gleam. I'm all for having existing BEAM users getting access to new languages, but I'm not sure why one would pick a BEAM language for non-server applications when the developer tooling story for CLI apps, line-of-business apps and so on is so much stronger for the .NET and JVM ecosystems. No offense to the Gleam folks intended.
nsm
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Aider has an ide mode close to this. Check out https://nikhilism.com/post/2026/nudge-skill/ to add similar behavior to certain agents. I too, am waiting for IDEs to do this in a polished way. next tab edit is not quite it
nsm
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Can people give examples of how they use pre-commit hooks that _cannot_ be replaced by a combination of the following?

* CI (I understand pre-commit shifts errors left)

* in editor/IDE live error callouts for stuff like type checking, and auto-formatting for things like "linters".

Do you run tests? How do you know _which_ tests to run, and not just run every test CI would run, which could be slow?
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Seconded. anecdotally. Heck, the best startup _founders_ I've worked with had young kids while in the most intense phases of the company!
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Highly recommend the LookAway app if you are on macOS and looking for something encouraging you to take breaks and maintain good posture.
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
What money do you think pays for most of the development of the Linux kernel? I assure you, it is not the altruistic goodwill of people around the world.
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
This is only true for a subset of software like mobile apps. Web developers are not paying for anything except compute.
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Would you pay for source-available products? GPL and paid license?

Along with a guarantee that you get to keep access to older versions (Jetbrains and Sublime Text models)?
nsm
·6 mesi fa·discuss
> The plain truth is that developers expect to get their tools free of charge.

This is an accurate, but damning indictment of how some of the most highly paid workers on the planet won't pay for tools. Unlike nearly every other profession.

Folks, if you can afford it, please pay for quality software, instead of relying on FAANG and VC money to keep the tools going!
nsm
·7 mesi fa·discuss
https://randomascii.wordpress.com/ - former Chrome engineer about all things performance engineering and particularly focused on Windows.
nsm
·8 mesi fa·discuss
> But at present, there is a big gap in the workflow: You leave your editor, open a browser, navigate to some page or tab, then navigate to the exact same place in the code you were just looking at, click on a line to open a text box, and finally you can write your comment.

Jetbrains can review GitHub PRs right in the IDE.
nsm
·10 mesi fa·discuss
The fees are paid by employers and not workers.
nsm
·anno scorso·discuss
Yes! Please support good paid software companies if you can afford them. Jetbrains, Sublime Text, others.
nsm
·4 anni fa·discuss
I’m curious. Why not create a new google account that is not used for anything but Tailscale and use that?